Tarnopolsky,
O. (2000). Writing English as a Foreign
Language: a Report from Ukraine. Journal of Second Language Writing, 9
(3), 209-226.
This article
continues the theme of EFL education in Central and Eastern Europe. It examines the history of English education
in the Ukraine and where it is heading i.e. what are the current needs and
expectations of students. As in Poland,
the initial main focus was on communication and reading. However, as the Ukraine moves forward in its
efforts to become more international and part of the greater world community,
there is a greater need and desire for EFL writing skills both for business/academics
and pleasure.
Tarnopolsky
outlines the challenges of developing appropriate course curriculums. At the time of the article’s publication,
there was a lack of specialists. That
may or may not have changed in the intervening 12 years. There is also the economic consideration of
the expensive of materials and teachers’ time.
Also a problem is the modification of Western training and instructional
materials, most ESL oriented, to the diverse needs of students studying in a
given country, in this case the Ukraine, and the somewhat different needs of an
EFL classroom.
In 1996/1997,
Tarnopolsky was part of a survey that polled the needs of English language
learners. What they found was that
70
percent of potential students needed an ESP course, and not less than 65
percent of those that were eager to learn ESP preferred it to be Business
English. At the same time, all potential
learners without exception said they wanted a course of General English to
precede ESP (Tarnopolsky 214).
Further
survey questions noted that 85% of interviewees felt a need for the four main
areas of language skills. Out of this 85
%, 99 percent claimed that they “absolutely needed reading and writing for communication”
(Tarnopolsky 214). Still further 21
percent indicated that “they required reading and writing skills in that
language (English) even more for their jobs [than speaking and listening]” (Tarnopolsky
214). Tarnopolsky attributes this to “well-established
and regular contacts on personal and professional levels…[that] requires dealing
with foreign friends and/or partners not so much in person as through written
papers, documents, letter, etc.” (Tarnopolsky 214). Students wanted to learn the basics writing
skills but they also wanted them to be adaptive.
This survey
resulted in 2 versions of writing courses. The first was highly structured and used both the
process approach and the genre approach.
For various reasons the course was unsuccessful and had a high dropout/boredom
rate. The second version was more successful
and focused on writing for fun and team writing. Writing for fun turns out to be Tarnopolsky’s
main argument and it was back up by the results from the 2 versions of the
writing classes and interviews of the students.
More was gained by the students when they learned things in a fun,
collaborative and inductive reasoning type environment.
Would I
recommend this article to others? Definitely! It is even better than the previous article
in that it gives concrete ideas on types of creative EFL writing assignments
and the reasons behind them.